Easing a burden

Mary Stevens, editor, CMIO magazine
Earlier this week, CMS announced a final rule for Conditions of Participation that alleviates some of the burden of credentialing and privileging for telemedicine providers. The rule has been changed in response a range of suggestions from organizations of all stripes, CMS said.

Previous requirements didn’t take into account practitioners who provide only telemedicine services to patients; consequently, hospitals apply the credentialing and privileging requirements as if all practitioners were onsite, CMS said. The revised rule makes it the responsibility of the governing body of the hospital providing the telemedicine services to meet the existing requirements with regard to its physicians and practitioners providing telemedicine services.

Simplified credentialing and privileging burden is a start, but groups like the American Telemedicine Association have called for additional changes to expand telemedicine's role in care. Reimbursement is another area that must be addressed, as an article in our May issue describes.   

A goal of telemedicine and healthcare reform is to keep patients out of the emergency room. However, more care is being delivered in the ER, on the recommendation of primary care physicians—and this might be an unintended consequence of healthcare reform, the American College of Emergency Physicians (ACEP) has revealed. Eighty percent of emergency physicians said that emergency visits are increasing despite healthcare reform and changes in reimbursement, and almost 97 percent of these visits were referred by primary care physicians, according to an ACEP survey.

On the topic of health information exchange, another component of healthcare reform and the HITECH Act, Rhode Island’s state HIE, currentcare, began acquiring data last month, as Jeff Byers reports in “HIE Chronicles.” Is this the trickle that leads to the flood of information exchanged leading to improved care? One thing is certain: This is not the end of the story. It’s just the beginning.

Also not quite done is CMIO’s Health IT Top Trends Survey, which will be extended by a week. Procrastinators can click here for more information.

Mary Stevens, editor

mstevens@trimedmedia.com 
 

Around the web

HHS has thought through the ways AI can and should become an integral part of healthcare, human services and public health. Last Friday—possibly just days ahead of seating a new secretary—the agency released a detailed plan for getting there from here.

Philips is recalling the software associated with its Mobile Cardiac Outpatient Telemetry devices after certain high-risk ECG events were never routed to trained cardiology technicians as intended. The issue, which lasted for two years, has been linked to more than 100 injuries. 

Heart Rhythm Society President Kenneth A. Ellenbogen, MD, detailed a new advocacy group focused on improving EP reimbursements, patient care and access. “If you’re not at the table, you’re on the menu," he said.